In What is Property?, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon delivers a critique of private property, examining it both as a form of tyranny and liberty. He looks at the ways in which property is a natural right – in which people own the produce of their labor – but also can further greed, social classes, and crime. Readers will find Proudhon’s writing energetic, captivating, and true to the revolutionary spirit.This Dialectics edition includes over 75 original footnotes.
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Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809 - 1865) was a French politician, founder of Mutualism, and an early anarchist. Early in his life, Proudhon worked as a printer, which gave him the opportunities of learning Latin, reading extensively, and meeting Charles Fourier and Gustave Fallot. He was later exiled from France for insulting Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte.
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